fredag 2. desember 2016

Building a Cygnar Army

This is a quick beginner's guide to building a Cygnar army. Miniatures are expensive, and the game is quite complex. This little guide should put you on the right track, and help you spend your money on the right things!

Buy a battlegroup box

Cygnar Battlegroup Box

The battle boxes are great value for money, and a good place to learn the basics of the game. The rules are quite complex, and if you are not yet sure that Cygnar or WARMACHINE are what you want to do, it's a relatively small investment.

Those tiny 3-6 model battlebox games actually encompass most of how the full game works, so you do get a pretty good idea about what WARMACHINE is all about from playing them.

Play some games!

That's what it's all about! Buying a ton of miniatures for a game you don't enjoy is a pretty expensive mistake. Check if you think WARMACHINE is the game for you!

Join a Journeyman League

If there are some Press Gangers (official Privateer Press representatives) in the area, check if any could run a Journeyman League. Such leagues are a great way to build up a collection in small increments. I have done this twice myself, once for Cygnar and once for Trollbloods, and it was a very inspiring and great fun.

Build an army

As in any miniature game, there are models that are generally more useful than other models. In WARMACHINE, unlike many other miniatures games, you will probably end up having many more minatures than you need for playing one single army, and a lot of the fun of the game is finding new and exciting army combinations.

These are some of the staple models that tend to find their way into most armies. You already should have Maddox, an Ironclad, Lancer and Firefly from the battle box so I have not included them here.

There are many ways to build in WARMACHINE, and Cygnar is a combined arms type of army so you can do pretty much anything. Instead of just listing all the best models, I have made a small list of core models that you should get no matter what, and then some good models for building that army in various directions.

Thorn, Centurion, Captain Allister Caine

Core models

These are models that can have a place in almost any army, and with almost any caster.

Junior Warcaster - Our best solo. It allows you to give another model extra armor, which is a fantastic buff.

Trenchers - Very solid and flexible unit that is hard to remove.

Storm Lances - Arguably the best cavalry in the game, they need no support and hit like, well, warhorses covered in heavy armor!

Stormwall - The Cygnar colossal is great both at range and in melee, and works with pretty much all our casters. It's expensive, and does not combine well with Trenchers. So in the beginning you should probably get either Stormwall or Trenchers.

Trenchers, with Ragman in the background, fresh off the painting table

Crush your enemy in melee

Lanyssa is great for making your Warjacks more mobile

If you enjoyed punching people with your Ironclad, and want more heavy hitters, these are some of the models that play that game well.

Commander Coleman Stryker (Stryker1) - The Strykers all play a mean melee game, but this version is the easiest to play.

Arlan Strangewayes - If you want to play with lots of jacks, then Arlan can repair them and give them free focus.

Centurion or Stormclad - Two of our punchiest heavies.

Lanyssa Ryssyl - Allows you to charge further.

Ragman - Increases the damage on any units nearby.

Rhupert Carvolo - If you are playing with infantry or cavalry, Rhupert can make them tougher, harder to hit, or allow them to go through rough terrain with no penalty.

Shoot your enemy to bits

Captain Allister Caine

Cygnar has a very strong ranged game and can build an excellent gunline.

2 kommentarer:

A very good read :) I wish I had this kind of a walk-through when I started some time ago. ;-) Would have bought Trenchers instead of those hard to deliver Stomblade Infantry dudes. Yet, I think they have a punch when properly used. ;-)